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I can give you a for the method that fits your situation best.
Sometimes the driver is installed correctly, but Windows "sleeps" the Bluetooth radio to save power, causing the scroll function to lag or cut out. Right-click the Start button and select . Expand the Bluetooth section.
You can swap scroll directions or adjust tracking speed.
It adds a layer of software that makes Windows scrolling feel as fluid as macOS.
If your Apple Magic Mouse connects to your Windows PC but refuses to scroll, you aren't alone. Windows does not natively include the specific drivers required to interpret the touch-sensitive surface of the Magic Mouse. While the left and right clicks work via standard Bluetooth protocols, scrolling requires a bit of extra setup.
Windows doesn’t natively support the Magic Mouse’s touch-based scrolling. Without extra drivers, Windows sees it as a basic mouse with no scroll input.
This is a popular open-source tool that "spoofs" an Apple model ID to download the official Boot Camp support software directly from Apple's servers. Users can then extract the specific mouse driver (usually an .exe or .inf file) and install it manually.
I can give you a for the method that fits your situation best.
Sometimes the driver is installed correctly, but Windows "sleeps" the Bluetooth radio to save power, causing the scroll function to lag or cut out. Right-click the Start button and select . Expand the Bluetooth section.
You can swap scroll directions or adjust tracking speed.
It adds a layer of software that makes Windows scrolling feel as fluid as macOS.
If your Apple Magic Mouse connects to your Windows PC but refuses to scroll, you aren't alone. Windows does not natively include the specific drivers required to interpret the touch-sensitive surface of the Magic Mouse. While the left and right clicks work via standard Bluetooth protocols, scrolling requires a bit of extra setup.
Windows doesn’t natively support the Magic Mouse’s touch-based scrolling. Without extra drivers, Windows sees it as a basic mouse with no scroll input.
This is a popular open-source tool that "spoofs" an Apple model ID to download the official Boot Camp support software directly from Apple's servers. Users can then extract the specific mouse driver (usually an .exe or .inf file) and install it manually.